Mass transport within porous structures is a ubiquitous process in biological, geological, and technological systems. Despite the importance of these phenomena, there is no comprehensive theory that describes the complex and diverse transport behavior within porous environments. While the porous matrix itself is generally considered a static and passive participant, many porous environments are in fact dynamic, with fluctuating walls, pores that open and close, and dynamically changing cross-links. While diffusion has been measured in fluctuating structures, notably in model biological systems, it is rarely possible to isolate the effect of fluctuations because of the absence of control experiments involving an identical static counterpart, and it is generally impossible to observe the dynamics of the structure. Here we present a direct comparison of the diffusion of nanoparticles of various sizes within a trackable, fluctuating porous matrix and a geometrically equivalent static matrix, in conditions spanning a range of regimes from to . The experimental system comprised a close-packed layer of colloidal spheres that were either immobilized to a planar surface or allowed to fluctuate locally, within the space defined by their nearest neighbors. Interestingly, the effective long-time diffusion coefficient was approximately 35-65% greater in the fluctuating porous matrix than in the static one (depending on the size of the nanoparticle probes), regardless of the geometric regime. This was explained by considering the enhancing effects of matrix fluctuations on the short-time diffusion coefficient and cooperative "gate-opening" motions of matrix particles and nanoparticle probes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.1c00744 | DOI Listing |
Talanta
January 2025
School of Material Science and Engineering, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai, 201620, PR China. Electronic address:
Flexible sweat sensors play a crucial role in health monitoring and disease prevention by enabling real-time, non-invasive assessment of human physiological conditions. Sweat contains a variety of biomarkers, offering valuable insights into an individual's health status. In this study, we developed an advanced flexible electrochemical sensor featuring reduced graphene oxide (rGO)-based electrodes, modified with a composite material comprising nitrogen and sulfur co-doped holey graphene (HG) and MXene, with in-situ-grown TiO nanoparticles on the MXene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Sens
January 2025
Key Laboratory for Ultrafine Materials of Ministry of Education, School of Materials Science and Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China.
It is crucial yet challenging to sensitively quantify low-abundance biomarkers in blood for early screening and diagnosis of various diseases. Herein, an analytical model of intra-mesopore immunoassay (IMIA) was proposed, which was competent to examine various biomarkers at the femtomolar level. The success is rooted in the design of an innovative superparamagnetic core-shell structure with FeO nanoparticles (NPs) at the core and hierarchically porous zeolitic imidazolate frameworks as a shell (FeO@HPZIF-8), achieved through a soft-template directed self-assembly coupled with confinement growth mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Pharm
January 2025
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark. Electronic address:
Additively manufactured drug products, typically produced using small-scale, on-demand batch mode, require rapid and non-destructive quantification methods. A tunable modular design (TMD) approach combining porous polymeric freeze-dried modules and an additive manufacturing method, inkjet printing, was proposed in an earlier study to fabricate accurate and patient-tailored doses of an antidepressant citalopram hydrobromide. This approach addresses the unmet medical needs associated with antidepressant tapering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
January 2025
Department Water Resources and Drinking Water, Eawag Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Dübendorf 8600, Switzerland.
Understanding the interaction between multiphase flow and reactive transport in porous media is critical for many environmental and industrial applications. When a nonwetting immiscible phase is present within the pore space, it can remain immobile, which we call unsaturated flow, or move, resulting in multiphase flow. Previous studies under unsaturated flow conditions have shown that, for a given flow rate, the product of a mixing-driven reaction increases as wetting phase saturation decreases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers (Basel)
December 2024
College of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, Jilin University, Changchun 130022, China.
This study reports the development of highly conductive and stretchable fibrous membranes based on PVDF/PAN conjugate electrospinning with embedded silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) for wearable sensing applications. The fabrication process integrated conjugate electrospinning of PVDF/PAN, selective dissolution of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) to create porous networks, and uniform AgNP incorporation via adsorption-reduction. Systematic optimization revealed that 10 wt.
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